This Sorrowful Life opens with Rick, Daryl and Hershel plotting the betrayal of Michonne.
Speaking of solitude, Michonne has finally emerged from her own self-inflicted silence and isolation.
For example, episode seven ("When the Dead Come Knocking") was the first time Rick had met Michonne.
Freeing Michonne and making his last-ditch suicide run on the Governor is a pretty big step toward redemption.
As Michonne watches, Merle takes both characters down, capturing them and forcing them to drive back to Woodbury.
Michonne finally turned into a real character, and Rick confronted his demons in the form of his old Season One pal, Morgan.
Prison behind them, we get some great moments between Michonne and Merle.
The car pulls away and we get a lovely shot of Michonne in the road, framed by a bright green canopy of trees.
Michonne is getting more lines still, even back around the group.
Michonne, on the other hand, is pretty much the exact opposite.
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She should place just a tiny ounce of trust in someone like Michonne who risked her own life to save her and care for her all winter long.
Daryl is almost as bad as Michonne at communication skills.
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Everyone else is either too young, too crazy, or Michonne.
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Plus, if not for Michonne and her sword (maybe 2013 is fencing's year), this season of "The Walking Dead" might belong to Daryl, whose favorite zombie-slaying method is the crossbow.
He tells them about his plan to hand over Michonne, and then he admits that he was wrong before, that the strength of the group is the group itself, not its leader.
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